Ethical principles – an essential tool to combat climate change

The following is taken from the Unesco website and is (c) to them, but I thought it might be of use/value.

Named as the biggest challenge of the 21st century by world leaders, climate change is popularly conceived of in logistical, scientific and economic terms and not ethical terms. However, following the COP23, the 195 UNESCO Member States formally adopted on 15 November 2017 the Declaration on Ethical Principles in relation to Climate Change. This Declaration speaks to the responsibility to address the challenge and reinforces ethics at the center of the discussion. The Declaration sets out six ethical principles:

Prevention of harm

Precautionary approach

Equity and justice

Sustainable development

Solidarity

Scientific knowledge and integrity

The Declaration then moves on to elaborate how these principles could
be applied in different domains: in science, technology and innovation
systems; in education, in risk management processes, in public awareness
raising, in international cooperation and in governance for
accountability.
In order to fully grasp an ethical perspective addressing climate
change, one has to reflect on the following questions: Why are ethical
principles important to combat climate change? And, why is a declaration
of ethical principles necessary in relation to climate change?

Ethics are important because it is a philosophical technique that can
help society take a step back and have a broader view of what the
causes and consequences of climate change are, and how to react and act
accordingly. As an illustration, climate change is viewed as the
greatest threat to national development especially for small island
developing states. For example, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is an
island state that has been impacted by stronger hurricanes, longer
droughts, more frequent flash flooding and sea level rise in the last 20
years. In December 2013 for instance, damages from the troughs
impacting the island were estimated at US$93.3 million. In such a
situation, sticking to the facts and economic effects of climate change
is not enough to combat it.

Indeed, the ethical principle of equity and justice pushes States and
other pertinent actors to facilitate and encourage public awareness,
and participation in decision-making and actions by making access to
information and knowledge on climate change as well as on the means of
how to implement mitigation and adaption actions, widely available. This
should be done through strengthening social dialogue and communication
by the media, the scientific communities, civil society organizations
and the community as a whole.

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is a great example. In 2017, they
started a climate change public education programme and campaign
implemented by the United Nations Development Programme’s Japan
Caribbean Climate Change Partnership (UNDP J-CCCP) in coordination with
the Government of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. The campaign aims to
provide Vincentians with information on what climate change is and how
people can adapt to it. Public awareness and public education is an
important component of the push to integrate climate change
considerations into every aspect of the life of small and most
vulnerable communities.

In addition, ethical principles are necessary to combat climate
change more effectively and in a more justified manner. For instance,
South Korea is hit every spring with yellow sand storms blowing in from
Mongolia and China. However, with the recent industrialization and
deforestation of both western China and Mongolia, the yellow sand storms
contain a harmful substance in the dust that can affect people’s health
and cause social problems. This phenomenon is not particular to South
Korea and affects both China and Mongolia as well. Therefore, there is a
need to coordinate the countries’ actions in order to tackle and fight
against this problem.

This is where the solidarity principle comes in. Solidarity, in this
context, means that the countries affected have to recognize that they
are all sharing the world we live in and cannot forgo the possibility of
living on earth just to benefit themselves. Efforts to protect and
enhance the world should be made in such a way that reflects the
solidarity and interdependence among peoples of different backgrounds.

Through both examples, it is clear that climate change is
fundamentally an ethical issue. If failure to act against climate change
could have catastrophic implications, responses to climate change that
are not thought through carefully, with ethical implications in mind,
have the potential to devastate entire communities, create new paradigms
of inequity and misdistribution, and render even more vulnerable those
peoples who have already found themselves uprooted by other man-made
political and ideological struggles.

With the recent release of the IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C (link is external),
the Declaration is needed more than ever. The conclusions of the report
make the strongest case for the UNESCO motto ‘Changing Minds, Not the
Climate’: changing how we measure economic success, changing how we make
public policy, taking vital economic services into account, changing
how we educate current and future generations. The ethical dimensions of
our choices for growth and development lie at the core of such
transformative change. Therefore, questions such as “which values will
we choose to drive economic, political and individual choices?”, “what
kind of society do we want to live in, and what kind of world do we want
to transmit to future generations?” are crucial to consider to combat
climate change and are difficult to address without the help of the Declaration on Ethical Principles in relation to Climate Change.

Our Thoughts

We would like to wish you a Merry Christmas from Ethical Marketing News. It’s been another great year, and whilst we will not be publishing as much over the next week we will have some stories be back to normal from the 3rd of January. Hope Santa is...